It's the pits "BEING punched in the back of the neck with a blunt instrument." That's how William Morton, a retired flautist with the Royal Opera House orchestra in London, describes the blast of sound that assaults the senses of musicians performing in the confined spaces of an orchestra pit. Musicians in these claustrophobic dug-outs can struggle to … News
Act now, think later WESTERN democracies are founded on a complicated network of compromises, the best known of which stems from the conflict between the needs of the state and the rights of the individual. Without compromise on one side the result is totalitarian government; on the other it's anarchy. In Britain, another of these balancing acts is about … Opinion
Perfect casting A pinch of this, a squirt of that. David Tompsett was a craftsman who had mastered a tricky process using methods of his own devising. His unique skill was in creating solid casts of delicate hollow structures: blood vessels and airways, animal or human. The results of his work, mostly from the 1950s, are on … Features
. . . and taxes Last Breath: Cautionary tales from the limits of human endurance by Peter Stark, Macmillan, £16.99, ISBN 0333905709 "MEDITATION on inevitable death should be performed daily," wrote the 18th-century samurai Yamamoto Tsunetomo. "Every day one should meditate on being carried away by surging waves, falling from thousand-foot cliffs, dying of disease." Such acceptance of our mortality … Books & Arts
Feedback DOESN'T IT drive you insane when a company answers the phone with one of those horrid, time-consuming, automated systems? Press 1 for this, 2 for that, 3 for the other. And then press 1 for something else, 2 for something different, and so on, until you end up saddled with something completely different from what … Regulars